The dangers of powder in surgical gloves
The dangers of powder in surgical gloves have long been known and well-documented. Eliminating the use of glove powder can help eliminate several adverse health effects that may result from its use, such as postoperative adhesions, granulomas, wound contamination and delayed wound healing 1 2 .

Surgical glove powder can cause the following adverse health effects:
Increased risk of surgical site infections (SSIs):
Glove powder can trigger reduced resistance to infection, bacterial environmental contamination, foreign body reaction, delayed wound healing, adhesion formation and granuloma formation 1 2. All of these potential consequences can increase the risk of surgical site infection (SSI) 3.
Latex allergy and occupational asthma:
Powdered latex gloves have been implicated as the largest single contributor to the latex aeroallergen levels in a healthcare facility 4 5. Latex proteins can be aerosolized by attaching to glove powder. This not only increases the risk of acquiring a latex allergy, but can also increase the risk of acquiring occupational asthma 6 .
Glove powder increases latex allergy sensitization, potentially eliciting delayed hypersensitivity reactions. Powdered surgical gloves show higher levels of natural rubber latex allergens than gloves that are powder-free. This allows for the potential increase in latex sensitization and/or Type I reactions upon direct and indirect contact 7 8 9 10 11 12.
For more information about the dangers of powder, please read the publication of the Top Clinical Reasons to Wear Powder-Free Gloves.
Biogel surgical gloves: powder-free since 1984
Every single Biogel® surgical glove is powder-free, and has been for over 30 years.
Biogel sold the world's first powder-free surgical glove in 1984, and over 30 years later, Biogel is still the only major surgical glove brand with an exclusively powder-free range.
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